Brand | Sunbeam |
---|---|
Model Number | BVMC-ECMP1000 |
Color | Stainless Steel |
Product Dimensions | 28.5 x 22.5 x 32 cm; 4.7 Kilograms |
Power / Wattage | 1040 watts |
Material | Stainless Steel |
Special Features | Programmable |
Item Weight | 4.7 kg |
Sunbeam Café Barista | One-Touch Espresso, Latte & Cappuccino Coffee Machine | 2L Water Tank | Automatic Milk Frother & Removable Milk Reservoir | 15 Bar Pump | Stainless Steel
Price: | $179.00 & FREE Delivery. Details |
Material | Stainless Steel |
Brand | Sunbeam |
Colour | Stainless Steel |
Voice command | Touchscreen, Dial |
Item Weight | 10.37 Pounds |
About this item
- The Easy Way to Great-Tasting Coffee: The one-touch control panel allows you to select an espresso, cappuccino or latte, then does the hard work for you to produce delicious, café-quality coffee
- Takes the Guesswork Out of Milk Frothing: Simply turn the dial to select how frothy you'd like your coffee, and the automatic milk frother takes care of the rest
- Keeps Your Milk Fresh: The removable 470ml milk reservoir allows you to store your milk in the fridge between uses, so there's no waste and your milk stays tasty and fresh
- Easy-Fill Water Tank: The large capacity, removable 2L water tank allows for easy filling to make lots of delicious coffee
- For Any Size Coffee Cup: The pull-out tray is ideal for smaller cups, and ensures there's no splashing as your coffee pours; larger cups fit easily onto the removable coffee tray below
- What's Included: 1 x Café Barista, 1 x Porta Filter Group Handle, 2 x Filter Baskets (1 cup and 2 cup), 1 x Measuring Scoop/Tamper
Product Information
Colour Name:Stainless SteelTechnical Details
Technical Specification
Additional Information
ASIN | B007K9OIMU |
---|---|
Customer Reviews |
4.4 out of 5 stars |
Best Sellers Rank |
366 in Kitchen & Dining (See Top 100 in Kitchen & Dining)
5 in Espresso & Cappuccino Machines 87 in Small Kitchen Appliances |
Date First Available | 1 September 2017 |
Frequently bought together
Customers who viewed this item also viewed
- Sunbeam EM3820 Café Espresso II Coffee Machine | Espresso, Latte & Cappuccino Coffee Maker| 1.7L Water Tank | Milk Frother | 15 Bar Italian Pump | Stainless Steel Milk Jug | Silver,Black
- Sunbeam EM5300K Barista Max Coffee Machine | Automatic Espresso, Latte & Cappuccino Coffee Maker with Integrated Bean Grinder & Steam Milk Frother | 15 Bar Italian Pump | Black
- Sunbeam EM4300S Mini Barista Coffee Machine | Espresso, Latte & Cappuccino Coffee Maker | 2L Water Tank | Milk Frother | 15 Bar Italian Pump | Silver
- De'Longhi Dedica Style, Traditional Barista Pump Espresso Machine, Coffee and Cappuccino Maker, EC685M, Metal [International version]
- Breville Cafe' Venezia Espresso Machine, Brushed Stainless Steel BES250BSS
- De'Longhi Automatic Coffee Machine Automatic Coffee Machine, Silver, ECAM22110SB
Have a question?
Find answers in product info, Q&As, reviews
Your question might be answered by sellers, manufacturers, or customers who bought this product.
Please make sure that you've entered a valid question. You can edit your question or post anyway.
Please enter a question.
Product description
Brew cafe-quality coffee just the way you like it right at home. In one simple touch, the Sunbeam Café Barista brews espresso coffee with a 15-bar pump system and automatically froths milk into cappuccino and latte selections. You don't need barista know-how to create custom coffee drinks like your favourite coffee shop; simply pick a single shot or double shot filter, add your coffee grounds, fill the milk reservoir and choose your brew. The removable water tank allows for easy filling, and the removable milk reservoir means you can keep leftover milk fresh in the fridge, ready for your next coffee.
Customers who bought this item also bought
- Sunbeam EM0405 Multigrinder II | Coffee Grinder, Herb Grinder & Spice Grinder | 165W | One-Touch Control | Brushed Stainless Steel
- Grinders Coffee, Crema, Roasted Beans, 1kg
- Sunbeam EM0100 Bang Bang - Used Coffee Grind Bin
- Avanti Compact Knock Box Black, 15100
- Sunbeam EM0440 GrindFresh Conical Burr Coffee Grinder, 25 Grind Settings, Direct to Handle Grinding, 250g Bean Hopper, for Espresso, Filter, Turkish Coffee and More, Grey/White
- Wahl Professional Animal Limited Edition Touch-Up Dog, Cat, and Pet Trimmer Set
What other items do customers buy after viewing this item?
Customer reviews
Top reviews from Australia
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
It's easy to use, doesn't burn the coffee or milk and all from my own home.
I decide to try and live a more environmentally friendly life in 2018.
1. No more take away coffee cups!
To help me out I decide that getting an espresso maker for home would stop my morning stop at McDonald's drive through on the way to work. (Yes they are happy to fill my keep cup but why waist the petrol or $5 a day)
The machine saves me big dollars and the hardest decision now is that coffee beans to buy.
It's quick to clean and I love that I don't need to froth the milk myself as it gives me time to cook breakfast.
It doesn't grind, but does a good job of filterring coffee and frothing milk.
Bad points:
You can't make and store levels to make certain sized cups, you have to use their presets or do full manual mode.
Cleaning could be easier if the top and other parts didn't have as many ridges and corrogated surfaces that take extra effort to clean.
Still, you can get at all the parts you need to so can be done!
Milk frother parts can be cleaned with the inbuilt mode, and/or soaked in bicarb solution.
Removeing the filter strainer from the head could have been a little easier.
Still, the machine does what it was made to do, and does it very well!
One thing I’m not happy/sure about is that it makes a clicking noise once turned off for a while before stopping but it hasn’t degraded the quality and operation of the device so 5/5.
I can not get it to extract coffee correctly it either goes through the ginds too quick or finer grinds to slow i have a sunbeam bur grinder and am unable to get the sweet spot for the grind to make a really good cup of coffee my 20 year old basic brevil makes a far superior cup of coffee
And also it is taking longer than pod machine to get a drink to all visitors.
Some design faults that are frustrating as well, but for a cheap machine......?!
Top reviews from other countries

First off my background. I am not, nor have I every been a barista. I am an average person who likes mochas from the coffee shop, but I live 80 miles from town, so I don't get them very often and wanted to try making them at home. This is my first espresso machine. I read a lot of blogs and watched online videos from real baristas giving tips how to make good espresso drinks at home before purchasing this. I got this thing and things didn't taste right to me, bitter. So I did more research and figured out the problem, it wasn't heating up well. I checked temperature and it was only getting to 157*F on average (too cold) and took 14-15 seconds to make one shot (too fast). NOT what the online advice says you need. Online advice says 170-180*F and 27-30 seconds is about right. So I called Mr Coffee for help before I sent it back to Amazon. GLAD I did.
The call: In short, customer service told me to run a cleaning cycle per directions from page 16 in the user manual. Which is 1/2 tank of white vinegar, hit the button for double shot. Repeat as many times as you need. Also run a cleaning cycle through the milk dispenser. My thought was, "what the heck, its a new machine! I did the priming as directed before use, how can it be dirty?" But I had to give it a try or send it back. Well I'll be go to heck, it WORKED!
While directions said you only need to run it few times. I had the time, so I ran the whole 1/2 tank white vinegar through (double shot at at a time) since I has to toss the vinegar anyway, so why not really clean it eh? Anyway, after a couple times running the double shot espresso button the temperature went from consistent 157*F to 175-182*F. Wahoo! It seemed to matter how long I let it warm up between shots. Running two times consecutively got the 175-177*, which is just what you want. Letting it sit and warm up a few minutes before runs got it 180-184*, which is getting a little too hot. BTW, I was using a good quality quick, calibrated thermometer that I use for caramel making, which is a very exacting process to do right. So I figured it could accurately measure the espresso before it cooled from air temperature, which by the way is mere seconds I found out.
NOTE: The higher temperature is NOT for drinking comfort (how hot you like it) it is what the espresso NEEDS to properly extract and not be bitter. You can let it sit a few minutes if you don't like it that hot, personally I don't want a burned tongue, so I wait a little. Coming out of the machine perfect drinking temperature is NOT a good thing.
SECOND NOTE: Running the vinegar through is NOT descaling, it is cleaning. Descaling is something else you do, read the manual on how. The vinegar clean is NOT priming, it is cleaning. Don't know why you need to clean the new machine in addition to priming, but DO it anyway. Make sure to rinse the reservoir out, then run some PLAIN water through to remove the vinegar afterwards, do it as many times as it takes to get the smell out, mine took a full reservoir. Honestly though it's faster shipping it back and waiting for a replacement machine because it doesn't get hot enough, this WORKS.
When I first got it, as I said it was taking 14-15 seconds to run the shots through. During the cleaning process they got longer and longer. Now that it's clean, it's about 28-30 seconds. Again, just what you want. I use my cell phone stop watch feature to be accurate.
In summary, based on what I've read and how I got it to work well, at least for "normal" person standards. This a good machine. Here's my TIPS TO GET IT WORKING RIGHT:
1. Learn to grind grounds well. Do NOT buy pre-ground, buy beans and grind them yourself. It has to do with when the oil is release one how well it works. If you are going to the trouble to use a machine like this (rather than just normal a coffee machine) you can go to the effort to grind as well, it's just part of the process.
You can use the hand held cone burr grinders for the most accurate fine ground. Or you can spend a bundle on an electric burr grinder. From what I read, you REALLY do need to get a good one if you go electric. In fact that is almost more important than the machine they say. Inconsistent size of grounds will yield inconsistent shots. Too fine (Turkish grind, which is like flour) and it clogs the filter making the machine unable to push all the water through. Too course (regular coffee machine grind) and the water goes through too fast making it bitter. Espresso grind has to be the consistency of table salt.
I'm cheap, so using the hand grinder does work and I advise it for other cheap people. However, in the morning I am cranky and impatient, I'm also lazy, so I've ordered a couple different electric burr grinders to see if that works as well. I plan to return which ever (or both) that don't grind as the espresso NEEDS (good ol Amazon prime and their return policies). No, I did not take the online baristas advice and buy a $200 burr grinder (I am cheap after all), but I did spend about $50 on a burr grinder and $20 on a blade style. Will update when I have decided what works or not, which I kept or if I end up just doing the hand grind.
2. Learn how full to fill the cup. At least to the top of the rim, or a little higher. You want the end result about 1/8-1/4" from the top. The amount in the cup DOES matter.
3. Learn how to pack your grounds to 30lbs of pressure. How to do that, put your bathroom scale on the counter. Use your tamper to push until you get the feel of 30lbs pressure. Repeat several times until you can push it pretty accurately. This is very important. Also, but a metal tamper, the plastic one isn't sturdy enough for 30 lbs pressure, it bents and packs unevenly. You can get metal tampers cheap, it's worth it.
4. Before you make your cup each morning, warm the machine as directions indicate, but ALSO run a shot of plain water through first. The second time through will be hotter, and it only takes 30 seconds.
5. Even though it's a new machine, and you did the priming as the manual says, run 1/2 tank of white vinegar through it (directions on page 16 of manual) and it will make a tremendous difference. Don't argue, just do it.
6. You can open the lid and fill the reservoir with it ON the machine with a pitcher if taking it on and off is too hard.
NOTE: I did NOT receive this at a discount in exchange for an honest review. This is a good machine for the average espresso based specialty coffee drinker. I gave it a full 5 stars because it's pretty idiot proof (I'm not the most mechanical person) and it makes mochas that are pretty darn good in my average persons opinion. I have no idea what a real coffee expert would say, and really, shouldn't they have a professional machine anyway? [...]

However, there is a dangerous design flaw that needs to be fixed ASAP. There is a tiny wood screw holding the 3 pieces of the portafilter together. This tiny wood screw works its way out of the plastic piece and falls into your coffee!
I discovered this when I poured a shot of espresso into my new $215 Nutri Ninja Auto-IQ Blender to make a bulletproof coffee. The tiny screw tore up the metal blades before I realized what was happening and turned it off. I guess I am lucky because ordinarily I would have just gulped the shot and the screw would have ended up somewhere in my digestive system.
When I fished the screw out I couldn't imagine where it had come from. I saw the tiny hole in the bottom of the portafilter but I just could not believe that Mr Coffee was using a wood screw into soft plastic to hold the portafilter together! Especially when, as was bound to happen, if it worked its way out, it would end up in the coffee! But later when I was cleaning the portafilter I saw that it came apart into 3 pieces and it had never come apart like that before. I had saved the little screw and I saw that, incredibly enough, this was what had been holding it together!
I have included pictures showing the pieces of the portafilter and the tiny screw that is supposed to hold all it together. The translucent thing is a seal between the other 2 parts. The red arrows point to the places where the screw goes.
Mr Coffee needs to fix this issue and provide a free replacement portafilter to everyone who owns a Cafe Barista.
If you own or buy a Cafe Barista I urge you to be proactive and remove the little screw before it works its way out on its own and you end up drinking it. The portafilter leaks and drips without the screw but that's better than having metal pieces in your coffee.

Reviewed in the United States on 3 October 2017
However, there is a dangerous design flaw that needs to be fixed ASAP. There is a tiny wood screw holding the 3 pieces of the portafilter together. This tiny wood screw works its way out of the plastic piece and falls into your coffee!
I discovered this when I poured a shot of espresso into my new $215 Nutri Ninja Auto-IQ Blender to make a bulletproof coffee. The tiny screw tore up the metal blades before I realized what was happening and turned it off. I guess I am lucky because ordinarily I would have just gulped the shot and the screw would have ended up somewhere in my digestive system.
When I fished the screw out I couldn't imagine where it had come from. I saw the tiny hole in the bottom of the portafilter but I just could not believe that Mr Coffee was using a wood screw into soft plastic to hold the portafilter together! Especially when, as was bound to happen, if it worked its way out, it would end up in the coffee! But later when I was cleaning the portafilter I saw that it came apart into 3 pieces and it had never come apart like that before. I had saved the little screw and I saw that, incredibly enough, this was what had been holding it together!
I have included pictures showing the pieces of the portafilter and the tiny screw that is supposed to hold all it together. The translucent thing is a seal between the other 2 parts. The red arrows point to the places where the screw goes.
Mr Coffee needs to fix this issue and provide a free replacement portafilter to everyone who owns a Cafe Barista.
If you own or buy a Cafe Barista I urge you to be proactive and remove the little screw before it works its way out on its own and you end up drinking it. The portafilter leaks and drips without the screw but that's better than having metal pieces in your coffee.



El costo por taza de café puede llegar a $1/taza (depende del café que se compre) y el sabor no le pude nada al café de cápsulas.
Además de contribuye a generar menos basura contaminante. En algunos países se ha prohibido la venta de cápsulas de café

